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Today's Paper | October 16, 2024

Published 30 Sep, 2008 12:00am

Hekmatyar claims responsibility for killing of French troops

KABUL, Sept 29: Afghan resistance leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar has claimed responsibility in a video message for an August ambush that killed 10 French soldiers, an Afghan news agency reported on Monday, saying it had seen the footage.

In the video statement, Hekmatyar also said he lost 10 men in the battle in Sarobi, the independent Pajhwok Afghan News agency reported.

The Taliban movement had also claimed responsibility for the attack, which was the deadliest for the French military in 25 years.

Pajhwok told AFP the video was delivered to its office in Peshawar in Pakistan on Sunday.

In it, the leader of the Hezb-i-Islami faction names nine of his party members killed in the fighting and expresses condolences to their families, the news agency said.

He warns of “more guerrilla assaults on US forces besides the French soldiers,” the agency said in a report on its website.

The mountain ambush in Sarobi, east of Kabul, was the deadliest ground attack on US-led invading troops since they were sent to Afghanistan in 2001 to oust the Taliban regime.

The attack, in which 21 troops were also wounded, shocked France and sparked debate about the country’s involvement in war-torn Afghanistan.

But France announced last week it would beef up its mission in Afghanistan with helicopters, drones and other military means.

French officers have said the ambushed soldiers were confronted by about 170 heavily armed militants who were better organised than usual.

They said they killed between 40 and 70 Afghan fighters, but acknowledged they only recovered one body from the battlefield as they withdrew under the cover of darkness.

French authorities have denied a report in Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper that its soldiers were no match for the better-equipped and trained fighters who attacked them on August 18.

The Afghan resistance fighters generally operate in southern and south-eastern Afghanistan, while the areas around Kabul and in northeastern Afghanistan are said to be the domain of Hekmatyar.

The Taliban had previously rejected working with Hekmatyar’s faction, but analysts have suggested they could be involved in some joint activities.—AFP

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